The New Ashla Podcast: Cultivating Consciousness through Inner Work and Self-Mastery
Episode Guide [https://drive.google.com/file/d/1GrlZ56kH-TumG6ek6KeM7eU-Ry91zEiJ/view?usp=sharing] You can be surrounded by people and still feel like no one would notice if you disappeared for a week. Loneliness does not always look like sitting alone. Sometimes it looks like busyness, exhaustion, independence, productivity, or protecting your peace. Slowly, the distance between you and the people you care about grows wider, and reconnecting starts to feel harder than staying isolated. In this episode, Michael and Justin explore how isolation becomes familiar, why healthy solitude can quietly turn into avoidance, and why reaching out feels so vulnerable. They discuss the stories we create when someone goes silent, the importance of offering grace without abandoning our own needs, and how relationships help us see ourselves more clearly. This is not about sending one generic text and pretending loneliness is solved. It is about recognizing withdrawal, taking one honest step toward connection, and becoming someone other people can feel less alone around. * Why loneliness disguises itself as independence * The difference between solitude and isolation * How busyness and productivity become avoidance * Why canceled plans can feel relieving * The stories we tell when someone stops reaching out * Why vulnerability creates deeper relationships * Practical ways to reconnect after time apart * Helping someone cross the threshold out of isolation * Healthy solitude helps you return to life more grounded. Isolation helps you avoid returning. * Someone’s silence does not automatically mean they stopped caring. * You do not need to feel ready before reaching out. * A specific invitation is more powerful than saying, “We should catch up sometime.” * Sometimes you need someone to hold the rope while you climb out. * The goal is not only to feel less lonely. It is to become someone others can feel less alone around. Think of the specific person who came to mind while listening. Send them one direct message and name an actual next step. You might say: * “I noticed you’ve been quiet lately. How are you, really?” * “I miss you. Would you like to grab coffee this week?” * “You crossed my mind today, and I wanted to check in.” If leaving the house feels overwhelming, begin with the message. Make the next step honest, specific, and manageable. * I am allowed to reach out first. * My presence matters to people. * Connection is worth the risk of being turned down. * I am someone people can be less alone around. * Who has gone quiet in your life, and what story have you told yourself about why? * Are you stepping back so you can return more grounded, or stepping away so you do not have to return? * What is the worst honest outcome of reaching out, and could you survive it? “Am I stepping back so I can return more clearly, or am I stepping away so I do not have to return at all?” Keywords: loneliness epidemic, social isolation, meaningful connection, healthy solitude, vulnerability, friendship, community, avoidance, authentic relationships, peer support, spiritual connection, Path of Ashla Connect: Michael Perry [https://www.facebook.com/michael.perry.18400700/] | Justin Gates [https://www.facebook.com/JustinVGates] Follow: TikTok [https://www.tiktok.com/@justinvgates?is_from_webapp=1&sender_device=pc] | New Ashla [https://newashla.com] Explore more episodes, companion materials, and coaching at New Ashla [https://newashla.com]
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